Sharps Maxine, Robinson Eric
University of Liverpool, Institute of Psychology, Health and Society, Eleanor Rathbone Building, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 7ZA, United Kingdom.
University of Liverpool, Institute of Psychology, Health and Society, Eleanor Rathbone Building, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 7ZA, United Kingdom.
Appetite. 2017 Jun 1;113:41-50. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.02.015. Epub 2017 Feb 10.
There is initial evidence that beliefs about the eating behaviour of others (perceived eating norms) can influence children's vegetable consumption, but little research has examined the mechanisms explaining this effect. In two studies we aimed to replicate the effect that perceived eating norms have on children's vegetable consumption, and to explore mechanisms which may underlie the influence of perceived eating norms on children's vegetable consumption. Study 1 investigated whether children follow perceived eating norms due to a desire to maintain personal feelings of social acceptance. Study 2 investigated whether perceived eating norms influence eating behaviour because eating norms provide information which can remove uncertainty about how to behave. Across both studies children were exposed to vegetable consumption information of other children and their vegetable consumption was examined. In both studies children were influenced by perceived eating norms, eating more when led to believe others had eaten a large amount compared to when led to believe others had eaten no vegetables. In Study 1, children were influenced by a perceived eating norm regardless of whether they felt sure or unsure that other children accepted them. In Study 2, children were most influenced by a perceived eating norm if they were eating in a novel context in which it may have been uncertain how to behave, as opposed to an eating context that children had already encountered. Perceived eating norms may influence children's eating behaviour by removing uncertainty about how to behave, otherwise known as informational social influence.
初步证据表明,对他人饮食行为的看法(感知到的饮食规范)会影响儿童的蔬菜摄入量,但很少有研究探讨解释这种影响的机制。在两项研究中,我们旨在重现感知到的饮食规范对儿童蔬菜摄入量的影响,并探索感知到的饮食规范对儿童蔬菜摄入量产生影响的潜在机制。研究1调查了儿童是否由于渴望维持个人的社会认同感而遵循感知到的饮食规范。研究2调查了感知到的饮食规范是否会影响饮食行为,因为饮食规范提供了可以消除行为不确定性的信息。在两项研究中,儿童都接触到了其他儿童的蔬菜摄入信息,并对他们的蔬菜摄入量进行了检测。在两项研究中,儿童都受到了感知到的饮食规范的影响,当他们被引导相信其他儿童吃了大量蔬菜时,与被引导相信其他儿童没有吃蔬菜时相比,他们吃得更多。在研究1中,无论儿童是否确定其他儿童接受他们,他们都会受到感知到的饮食规范的影响。在研究2中,如果儿童是在一个可能不确定如何行为的新环境中进食,而不是在他们已经熟悉的进食环境中,他们受感知到的饮食规范的影响最大。感知到的饮食规范可能通过消除行为不确定性来影响儿童的饮食行为,也就是所谓的信息性社会影响。